Inside
Nam Hatta
has the scoop on goings-on, developments and issues important to the
disciples and followers of His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami
Prabhupada.
By
Kedar Nauth
Dutt (aka Srila Bhaktivinode Thakur)
Originally printed in Calcutta by G.P. Roy & Co., 1857
This extract is taken from a photocopy of the world's only copy kept at
the British Museum. The manuscript was never completed.
Dedicated to Mrs. E. Lock,
Authoress of "Leisure Hours", etc. etc. This book is most respectfully inscribed by her obliged
and obedient
servant,
The Author
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It has often been observed that this is the age of facts and not of
poetry; that men are more willing to follow the doctrines of Bentham
than to amuse themselves with the beauties of Shakespeare. This remark
has very little foundation afer all. For, notwithstanding their
tendency to useful objects, people are ever disposed to lend their
listening ears to the gentle voice of the Muse. This consideration,
however, leads me to publish this little book of poem with a view to
obtain the encouragment of the public which will enable me to give the
other parts to the world. To please men at their leisure hours is not
the only object of my work, but some historic importance will no doubt
be attached to it. The life of Pooroo (with somewhat of a poetic
license of course) and his war with Alexander will be described at
length.
K.N. Dutt
Argument
The poet laments the fate of his Country—Invokes the Muse—Sindus the
king of Taxilus—He being childless requests his priests to find the day
when he will have a child—After consulting their rules of foretelling
they presage the birth of Pooroo—Pooroo takes his birth—His Satara—His
boyhood—He goes to play on the Sutledge bank—There he kills a
hind—Serious reflections—He goes out to travel in the dress of a
hermit—The king hears of his disappearance—The queen mourns—The priests
pray—Pooroo stands on a hill and sees the stars and the moon—He sleeps
in a grot—The vision appears and advises him to go to China.
Alas! the days of glory are no
more,
When Hindu fame rang out from
shore to shore;
When Asak's
arms encompassed distant lands,
And Grecia trembled at our
martial bands!
Alas! no Rama bends his massive
bow,
To give a tyrant a destructive
blow.
No more his pon'drous club a Bhima wields,
Nor from savage foes, this his
country shields.
Those days are gone, those suns
appear no more,
Dark, dark is now our
once so sunny shore!
Our sun is bright, but we do
never shine,
Since bearded hero passed
Himalah-line.
Now for the blood, our tears
alone are shed!
We tell a tale that such a hero
bled.
Our shames are these, and those
the glories were!
To these we cling, toward those
we never stir!
Ah! rise my fellow men, attention
pay
To this poor song, which I before
you lay!
Come down, O Goddess fair, from
mountain's top,
In his uncommon flight, the poet
prop,
Oh! strengthen his daring wings
and let him soar
Above the clouds, and the pure
Truth explore.
The man who met the master of the
earth
By fair Taxila's bank, his death,
his birth,
His private life, oh Heavenly
Goddess sing,
In numbers sweet, as old
Castalia's spring!
A realm there was in western part
of Ind
Ruled by a king—the formidable
Sind.
Its name Taxilus, and its air was
fine,
And rich it was with many a
golden mine.
Full oft the grisly trans-Himalan
king
Would rain his hordes and gong of
battle ring.
To save fair Ind from such
invasions dread,
They placed the martial Sindus at
the head.
High on his throne the famous
monarch stands;
A golden sceptre dignifies his
hands.
He calls his Brahmin priests, and
fain would know
When God a son on him will sure
bestow.
"Oh friends of mine and parents
of my good,
Presage the time when this pure
Khettria blood
Of mine shall run in other veins.
Relate,
What power provoked has caused my
childless state."
Acharyas
gravely sit with chalk in hand,
And 'gin to scratch upon the
plates with sand.
At last they find the day, the
king address,
In orient strains, and thus the
fate express:
"O potent King, the brighter days
are now
To dawn upon thy fortune's
charming brow,
Three times the sun the scorpion
grim shall meet
Ere you, and your beloved a son
may greet,
And time shall see your future
martial heir,
Upon the hugest beast to wars
repair,
A mighty 'shoor shall once invade
our land,
And fiercely march destroying
sword in hand;
A check he'll meeet with from
your son at last
By which he shall be back on
Persia east,
Though mountains fall, and the
still earth uprise,
Our word as sure as Bhishma's arrow flies."
Thus told the sage foretellers of
the fate;
And to his queen the king with
joy elate.
The stated time expires, the son
is born,
His bright complexion does the
hall adorn.
The eyes of cheerful Sind express
delight,
His mind grows big with joy at
ev'ry sight.
Day after day they see the son to
grow,
And 'clipse the charming grace of
all below.
The sixth day comes, the joyful
maids prepare
The things required for satara-affair.
A goat is kept just by the
nursery door,
A pen—a palm leaf are placed on
the floor;
For Brahma
will that night from heaven descend,
And write the fate of child from
birth to end.
For him a wooden plank is placed
aright,
On which the God will sit the
fate to write;
The queen herself with her
surrounding maids,
Keep up the night in hand the
iron blades.
Now when the dismal darknses of
the night
Beyond the western main doth make
its flight.
Pursued by fierce rays of the
darting sun,
Who rears his head on east, as it
doth run;
At such a time the queen, her
maidens fair,
Forsake the room, and then to
bathe repair;
Ablutions finished, come they
home again,
Bow down their heads to Shusty's holy fane.
A month passed on, the Gods now
have their rites,
The moony face of child the king
delights.
Six signs the Day-God doth now
keep behind,
The child does learn to walk on
knees they find.
Thus much, O Muse! now let my
harp repose,
Throw not thy sweets on themes
becoming prose,
The days of childhood suit no
longer thee,
On themes sublimer let thy
fingers free;
Pass o'er the barren track of
Pooroo's life;
Now sing his manhood and relate
his strife;
Do justice to his might and truly
say,
With what great skill the potent
king did sway.
The sceptre of a realm extending
wide,
From Ilymalya's chain to Ocean's
side!
Now comes the son of king to
youthful age
And doth to science and arts his
mind engage,
Learns every book and leaves no
branch unknown,
Till on the top of learning's
hill he shone;
Now counts the stars, the
planet's path descries,
Then sees the map to find where
Lanka lies;
Now tries to find the class that
goose enrols,
Then learns the branch that
treats of stones and coals;
Now reads and writes and learns
to work a sum,
Then sings and rings and beats
the stately drum;
Thus goes his time. The lovely
prince one day,
Upon the Sutledge banks begins to
play
With all his comrades, all
supremely good;
And gazing at the streamlet's
scene they stood.
Now when his friends are charmed
by nature's grace,
The youthful prince doth seek
another place,
Where trees unnumbered stand in
grand array,
And hungry beasts do roam in
search of prey;
To such a place th' undaunted
prince alone
Resorts with bow and arrow—sling
and stone;
Now kills a goat with his
unerring dart,
Then wounds a deer with admirable
art;
As when his jolly friends a
gambler eyes,
To bring his cards with over
haste he tries;
But if the cards he does not
quickly find,
Exceeding wrath disturbs his
peaceful mind;
So was the prince; when he did
find at last,
His quiver empty, and his arrows
cast.
There lies a lake where ends this
thick-grown wood,
By side of which a stately yew
tree stood,
Haunts there the stag when urged
by midday heat,
To quench its thirst and cool its
burning feet;
Now there the prince pursued an
ancient hind,
And cast at it at last his shaft
unkind,
Dead fell the beast: a sigh with
pathos warm
Attracts the prince's mind
profaned with harm.
He leaves his bow and pointed
shafts behind,
And goes in haste where groans
the dying hind.
Now sad reflection clouds his
mental realm,
And questions past our thought
his heart o'erwhelm:
"From whom is life? And whence
this frame of man?
What mighty power has formed this
mighty plan?
Why live we here? And why desire
and feel?
For what we turn with time's
revolving wheel?
I eat, and live, and sleep, and
spend the day
But never think of these!—my life
is gay!
From this awaking hour I let my
eyes
Select my way, led by the guiding
Skies.
This day I leave my ever-gorgeous
vest.
To visit lands, extending in the
west.
Ye woods! be witness, I my
country leave
And come not back until my end
achieve."
This said, the prince now throws
his dress aside,
And wears the tiger's thickly
spotted hide.
A trident graced his powerful,
strong right hand,
The other one supports a
threatening wand;
Now that our hero moves with
hasty strides
And comes where old renowned
Hydaspes glides;
Passes it o'er and sees the
scenes around,
And hears the waterfall's
refreshing sound;
The distant mountain shows its
snowy crest
and grandly standing doth invite
its guest;
It was the time when Eve her
gloomy shades
Diffused on woods and moutains,
vales and glades;
It was the time when that
e'er-shining star
Began to shoot her light on earth
afar;
Now lo! the demon Gloom doth
spread his wings
O'er all that bear the name of
earthly things.
Now here on Sutlege banks the
prince's mates
Suppose their friend is gone to
palace gates.
Hasten they home and seek him
everywhere,
But wonder, still they cannot
find him there;
But wonder ceased to tease their
peaceless brain
When found the prince was not to
come again;
They searched the woods, the
river banks they sought
But to their grief, alas! they
met him not!
At last they wept aloud, the king
now hears
The sad event, and sheds his
bitter tears.
Somehow or other, Sindus seems to
know
The mystery yet unsolved to all
below;
He calls his men and thus imparts
his thought—
"O mighty men, your common aid
has brought
Me to the sovereignty of this
land;
O my much-valued chiefs—my
martial band!
To you I say with my deep-wounded
mind
Go, go wher'er my lovely son you
find;
Within the bounds of Asia's land
of yore
O where extends Europa's
barb'rous shore;
Where'er you see my son, go, meet
him there
To bring him home no melting
words you spare;
My splendour vain—my throne I
want no more;
Go, go and seek my son on distant
shore."
Commanded thus they run with
lightning haste,
And pass o'er fields and woods
and sandy waste:
Some toward the east are moving
with a speed
Resembling that of th' strong
Arabian steed;
The rising sun they face as if to
catch
That glittering orb, for his
neglected watch;
While others move along the
mountain-chain
That fences on the west their
king's domain;
Some seek the southern lands of
gloomy dread,
While others plod to north, of
cold afraid;
In all directions thus the men
are sent;
And priests employed, to God,
their prayers now vent;—
"Almighty Sire, our feeble
prayers oh hear!
Thy holy name destroys the gloom
of fear;
How oft we asked thy aid, and not
in vain!
How oft thy name dispelled our
sorrow's train!
Thy might hath wrought this
world, thou dost protect;
Thy lash of ruin its vices shall
correct;
Our tongues are poor indeed our
words are few,
We scarce can say, O sire, what's
due to you,
But lend thy listening ears, if
ears thou hast,
To us: and thy eyes gracious once
more cast;
Thy power has placed our Sindus
on the throne,
And blest him with a son, to
goodness prone:
But ah! Sire, that innocent royal
bud
Is lost.—The palace fair shall
turn to mud!
Thy sacred laws, no doubt, shall
make a room
For Anarchy's unconquerable gloom!
If Pooroo's dead, Father, then
all is gone!
And gloomy Death will reign on
earth alone!!"
Thus when the minds of men were
low with fears;
The pensive news now runs to
Rani's ears,
her rosy cheeks are marked with
drops of silent tears.
Now the brave Pooroo here ascends
a hill,
Along which glides a soft
retiring rill,
Thereon th' undaunted prince doth
stand aright
And cast his gentle eyes upon the
sight;
It was a cheering night, the
starry dome
Displayed the page of th'
astronomer's tome;
The sea-born
Phoebe's brighter, softer beam
Was lighting Nature's face with
sleeping gleam;
Lo there! that distant, passing
northern star
Is beckoning the sea-man from
afar!
And lo! the Pleides sit together
there
To make nocturnal club for man's
affair,
Behold that demon star doth stand
on high
As if commanded thus to guard the
sky!
His starry sword now glittering
hangs below,
His belts (of what we know not)
brightly glow!
The prince's hungry eyes were
fixed on these
Enchanting scenes that 'gan his
mind to please;
As when in golden days remoter far
The well-known Gupta and our Narsapur
Stood on the hills to read the
opened page
Of Nature's works and thus their
minds engage.
When through the astronomic eyes
they viewed
The lunar orb; their joy, their
strength renewed;
So now our prince with his
unaided eye
Looks at the starry realm above
the sky;
Satiety o'ercomes his curious
mind;
He casts his eyes abroad, around,
behind;
The fruitful trees invite his
sweeping eyes
The streamlet's crystal beauty he
descries,
The grassy vale o'ergrown with
leafy plants,
Th' untravelled mind of Pooroo
Raj enchants;
There in a nook a silent grot he
sees,
Bedecked with crystal grace the
guest to please;
Where steals with hasty steps the
lunar light,
And makes the grot an
ever-cheering sight;
Now Pooroo moves toward these
with princely air
Enters the place delightful,
choice and fair,
There lies he down to sell a part
of time
For rest, that seeketh man in
every clime;
When gentle sleep's intoxicating
power
O'ercame his an'mal force at
midnight hour,
A vision (sterner than Atrides
met—'
While Troy's walls stood
undemolished yet)
A vision stern appeared before
his eyes
Whose stature long the tall Tal
tree delies,
Whose hands were much more than
enow to break
A thousand like the famous Titan
a neck;
Courage doth fly before his
mighty breast,
His head o'ertops the mountain's
snowy crest;
Such a fierce sight appeared in
Pooroo's view;
His clothes were coloured with a
various hue;
He at the prince's face began to
pout;
These broken words his shivering
lips gave out:—
"Thou thoughtless boy, why are
thou here tonight?
Go seek another place with hasty
flight!
I know thy name, thy house is
known to me,
Thou art the son of Shindhoo Raj
I see;
I was a king before, but now no
more,
My name resound the bounds of
every shore,
Like yours my days were past in
mazy thought,
Like you I sought this solitary
grot,
But days went on, and Yoma's
darkest jaws
Fell close upon my neck like
tiger's claws;
I will not tell my name nor let
you know
The place to which at daybreak I
shall go;
But go, my silly boy, remain not
here,
Where China's realms extend,
without a fear,
There shalt thou see a man of
twice-two score
With hoary beards that measure
cubits four."
This said, he vanished from the
prince's sight;
Th' approach of morn dispelled
the dismal sight.
End of the first book.
Asak (Ashok)
was a great
Indian potentate and is known to have been the conqueror of almost
whole of Asia and some parts of Europe. He was the grandson of
Chandragupta or Sandrocotus of the Greeks. His exploits are all
recorded in the pages of the Boodha works.
Bhima
was the second son of
Koonti, the wife of Pandoo, and was a hero in the war recorded in the
Mahavarata. He was a very skilful wrestler and was placed at the head
of the army of the Pandavas. Vyasha relates a story concerning him,
which it is hoped, will please the readers both native and outlandish.
When all the Kings of India as well as other parts of Asia were united
in Panchal against Bhima, then in the disguise of a Brahmin, he with a
large bamboo in his hand beat them all away. He is said to have killed
a very dreadful giant called Hiramba in a duel which was followed by
his marriage with the sister of his dead antagonist, by whom he had a
son named Ghuttothkoch.
The Hindu astrologers are called Acharyas.
Bhishma was the son of
Shantonoo and Gunga. It is said of him that he killed two heavenly
beings with his arrow in their way upwards. He was the
Commander-in-Chief of the Kooroos in the first battle fought between
them and the Pandavas, who were headed by the famous Bhima. Bhishma was
never married on account of the promise he made when his father was
wedded to Shuttobutty. After ten days' continual action, the Pandavas,
without any hope of success, had recourse to a foul means to kill their
antagonist. An impotent man was placed before him, in consequence of
which Bhishma threw away his bow and arrows, as the sight of such a
creature was considered as a very bad omen. Thus disarmed, the great
Bhishma was run through by Arjoon.
Brahma
is one of the Hindu
Triad, and is said to have created the material world by order of the
Supreme Being—Brahman, whose origin is not known to man.
Shusty
is the goddess who presides over the
children, and resembles the mistress of Numa in all other respects but
love.
It
is said in the Hindu
mythology that the moon rose out of the sea at the time when Ramchundra
the son of Dashorath was five years of age. At this period the Hindus
learnt how to calculate solar and lunar eclipses.
Brahmagupta and Narsapur were the two great
Hindu astronomers of the ancient days.